The international house of dereliction
(Book)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Published
New York, NY : Clarion Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, [2023].
Status
Central - Kids Fiction
JF DAVIE
1 available
Westover - Kids Fiction
JF DAVIE
1 available

Copies

LocationCall NumberStatus
Central - Kids FictionJF DAVIEAvailable
Westover - Kids FictionJF DAVIEAvailable

Description

In this not-so-scary ghost story from Jacqueline Davies, bestselling author of the Lemonade War series, quirky, tool-wielding Alice Cannoli-Potchnik begins to repair the dilapidated mansion next door—only to discover the old house is home to ghosts, and they need mending, too!

Home is where the heart is. But can a house have a heart of its own?

Ten-year-old Alice is moving for the eleventh time.

She’s lived in so many houses, each more broken than the last, that home to Alice is nothing more than a place you fix and then a place you leave. After all, who needs a permanent home when you’re a whiz at fixing things?

But when Alice arrives at her new home, she can’t take her eyes off the house next door, the stately dark house that hulked in the dimming light. The once-grand mansion, now dilapidated and condemned, beckons Alice; it's the perfect new repair job!

As Alice begins to restore the House to its former splendor, she senses strange presences. Is there a heartbeat coming from the House’s walls? Is someone looking at her? Soon she realizes she’s not alone. Three ghosts have been watching, and they need Alice’s help to solve their unfinished business.

Will Alice be able to unravel the mysteries of the House and find her forever home . . . before it’s too late?

An ALSC Notable Children's Book

More Details

Format
Book
Edition
First edition.
Physical Desc
227 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Language
English
ISBN
9780063258075, 0063258072

Notes

Description
Ten-year-old Alice is moving for the eleventh time. She's lived in so many houses, each more broken than the last, that home to Alice is nothing more than a place you fix and then a place you leave. After all, who needs a permanent home when you're a whiz at fixing things? But when Alice arrives at her new home, she can't take her eyes off the house next door, the stately dark house that hulked in the dimming light. The once-grand mansion, now dilapidated and condemned, beckons Alice; it's the perfect new repair job! As Alice begins to restore the House to its former splendor, she senses strange presences. Is there a heartbeat coming from the House's walls? Is someone looking at her? Soon she realizes she's not alone. Three ghosts have been watching, and they need Alice's help to solve their unfinished business. Will Alice be able to unravel the mysteries of the House and find her forever home . . . before it's too late?

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NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These books have the appeal factors suspenseful and scary, and they have the theme "haunted houses and creepy places"; the genre "ghost stories"; and the subjects "haunted houses," "ghosts," and "moving to a new home."
Smart, sympathetic kids follow the clues to solve mysteries in these clever fantasies with large casts of quirky characters, including personified houses. Greenglass is the longer of the two with the more intricately plotted storyline. -- NoveList Advisor
The main characters of these suspenseful, attention-grabbing books -- both of whom have fathers who restore homes -- investigate the haunted house next door (Dereliction) and a ghostly summer mansion (What Lives). -- Basia Wilson
While Leeva has horrible, neglectful parents and Dereliction's Alice's mother and father are loving and supportive, these humorous, whimsical fantasies with exaggerated characterizations star sympathetic, resourceful girls who secretly find their place in the large domiciles next door. -- NoveList Advisor
With retro sensibilities (especially Miracles), these moving, feel-good novels showcase sympathetic girls secretly fixing up neglected abodes. While historical Miracles occurs on the home front during World War II, fantastical Dereliction is contemporary, but deals with ancient ghosts. -- NoveList Advisor
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In these funny, witty, and whimsical fantasies showcasing descriptive writing, likeable kids with supportive adults deal with supernatural creatures, which are a nasty threat in classic Witches or sympathetic ghosts in need of help in the contemporary International House of Dereliction. -- NoveList Advisor

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Alice, a bright, curious 10-year-old, lives with her mother, a college professor, and her father, who excels at repairing and renovating old houses. Fixing up one home after another, he has taught Alice his skills. Now she's ready to take on a new challenge of her own. Unburdened by school or even homeschooling expectations, she follows her inclination and secretly begins to work on the once-stately, now-dilapidated mansion next door, which has been condemned. She hopes to save the building, but as she secretly works on the fireplace tiles, chandelier, and the like, she becomes equally determined to help the ghosts who are destined to haunt the house unless they can complete certain tasks left undone when they died, decades or centuries ago. In this original novel, Davies shares her lively imagination and her gift for making even home renovation entertaining for young readers. While the house is truly haunted, this isn't a horror story; the main character acts out of kindness rather than fear. It's an unconventional ghost story with an unusual heroine and a satisfying conclusion.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

An indefatigable 10-year-old resolves to help the restless spirits haunting the house next door move on to the afterlife in this wholesome ghost story by Davies (The Bridge Battle). In what her mother promises will be the white-cued family's last uprooting for a while, Alice Cannoli-Potchnik and her loving parents move into a run-down house on the edge of the college campus where her mother lectures. While exploring the new neighborhood, Alice is drawn to the condemned abode next door. After fixing the residence's damaged hearth--an easy feat for handy Alice, who's helped her father fix up their last 11 homes--she finds herself in the company of several ghosts, all with unfinished business preventing them from passing on. But Alice's mission to assist her ghostly neighbors is jeopardized when a demolition crew arrives to tear the house down. Spurred by Alice's ferocious determination, this cleverly plotted genealogical mystery delves into the specters' history as much as Alice's own, culminating in an exhilarating sequence of events that proves Davies's uncanny balance of whimsy and excitement. This mesmerizing Monster House--flavored tale is packed with oodles of heart. Ages 8--12. (July)

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Kirkus Book Review

A project-oriented child has her work cut out for her in a long-abandoned house with several resident ghosts. No sooner does 10-year-old Alice discover that the derelict house next door has a heartbeat and is somehow aware of her than she knows what she must do. First, fix up at least the living room--a task of which she is perfectly capable, having assisted her father in refurbishing the last 11 houses they have lived in. Second, help the four ghosts she meets resolve the "Unfinished Business of the Heart" that's kept them from moving on. This proves considerably more difficult--but with Alice's being "a rare old soul with more flint and steel in her small body than most people might have guessed," it's not impossible despite obstacles ranging from a furious poltergeist to righting the shocking, shocking wrong of an overdue library book. Davies really cranks up the climax with the unexpected arrival of a demolition crew, but by that time the cast has already made this a magically immersive experience. Only the stony of heart could fail to fall in love with clever, competent, resolute Alice or, for that matter, the supporting cast that includes her adorable parents and a host of unfailingly interesting ancestors. On their way to the poignant, satisfying close, thoughtful readers may find some new insight into what Goodnight Moon is actually about, too. The cast reads White. Final art not seen. Well cast, well told, but mostly just terrific. (Paranormal. 9-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

Alice, a bright, curious 10-year-old, lives with her mother, a college professor, and her father, who excels at repairing and renovating old houses. Fixing up one home after another, he has taught Alice his skills. Now she's ready to take on a new challenge of her own. Unburdened by school or even homeschooling expectations, she follows her inclination and secretly begins to work on the once-stately, now-dilapidated mansion next door, which has been condemned. She hopes to save the building, but as she secretly works on the fireplace tiles, chandelier, and the like, she becomes equally determined to help the ghosts who are destined to haunt the house unless they can complete certain tasks left undone when they died, decades or centuries ago. In this original novel, Davies shares her lively imagination and her gift for making even home renovation entertaining for young readers. While the house is truly haunted, this isn't a horror story; the main character acts out of kindness rather than fear. It's an unconventional ghost story with an unusual heroine and a satisfying conclusion. Grades 4-7. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

An indefatigable 10-year-old resolves to help the restless spirits haunting the house next door move on to the afterlife in this wholesome ghost story by Davies (The Bridge Battle). In what her mother promises will be the white-cued family's last uprooting for a while, Alice Cannoli-Potchnik and her loving parents move into a run-down house on the edge of the college campus where her mother lectures. While exploring the new neighborhood, Alice is drawn to the condemned abode next door. After fixing the residence's damaged hearth—an easy feat for handy Alice, who's helped her father fix up their last 11 homes—she finds herself in the company of several ghosts, all with unfinished business preventing them from passing on. But Alice's mission to assist her ghostly neighbors is jeopardized when a demolition crew arrives to tear the house down. Spurred by Alice's ferocious determination, this cleverly plotted genealogical mystery delves into the specters' history as much as Alice's own, culminating in an exhilarating sequence of events that proves Davies's uncanny balance of whimsy and excitement. This mesmerizing Monster House–flavored tale is packed with oodles of heart. Ages 8–12. (July)

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Davies, J. (2023). The international house of dereliction (First edition.). Clarion Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Davies, Jacqueline, 1962-. 2023. The International House of Dereliction. New York, NY: Clarion Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Davies, Jacqueline, 1962-. The International House of Dereliction New York, NY: Clarion Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, 2023.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Davies, J. (2023). The international house of dereliction. First edn. New York, NY: Clarion Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Davies, Jacqueline. The International House of Dereliction First edition., Clarion Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, 2023.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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